>> I rang a few TV repair places and asked for the caps.... The gave me the
>> runaround and said that I should bring the TV into them. They wouldn't
>> make any money just selling me a couple of caps. They want the $60+
>> labour charge to do 2 minutes of soldering.
1. Liability. If you kill yourself installing this cap, they may be liable.
2. Repair does not consist of just changing the cap. I, for example, would
check the TV and fix any common problem your particular chassis may have,
preventing failure of something else in the near future. If fix the TV, no
matter how simple problem is, I have to give warranty. Hence is the charge.
Thsi is common -- TV repaireres will not normally sell parts. It is not
their business.
And as for returning customer -- I will not want to fix a TV for someone who
tried to fix it himself (no offence, James). Or wil fix it at extra charge.
Few reasons for it and it is not because I just want to punish the customer.
Mainly because it is virtually guaranteed I will spend more time on it.
Rudolf
kreed - 27 Jul 2007 08:05 GMT
> >> I rang a few TV repair places and asked for the caps.... The gave me the
> >> runaround and said that I should bring the TV into them. They wouldn't
[quoted text clipped - 15 lines]
>
> Rudolf
Fixing something that (especially a non-professional) has "had a go
with" is a nightmare. If parts have been changed, it might not be
possible to determine if they have been replaced with the same values,
and if you can't see or test the original part, it can be much harder
to determine the original fault(s), or what caused them in the first
place. Bodgy testing or component replacement can even create more
faults.
The other reason that they wouldnt want to sell components, is, you
replace a part without replacing whatever made it fail in the first
place, it fails again, the customer is likely to take it back to the
TV repair shop and expect some sort of warranty. This could be a
quite expensive exercise for something like a horizontal output
transistor that is replaced without replacing faulty HT cap, eht
transformer etc that caused it to fail, and will make it fail again.
Mr.T - 27 Jul 2007 11:54 GMT
> The other reason that they wouldnt want to sell components, is, you
> replace a part without replacing whatever made it fail in the first
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
> transistor that is replaced without replacing faulty HT cap, eht
> transformer etc that caused it to fail, and will make it fail again.
It's not a problem for DSE, Jaycar etc. They simply refuse to replace used
semiconductors.
You can test it before soldering if you have the appropriate test equipment.
MrT.
Franc Zabkar - 29 Jul 2007 01:16 GMT
>>> I rang a few TV repair places and asked for the caps.... The gave me the
>>> runaround and said that I should bring the TV into them. They wouldn't
>>> make any money just selling me a couple of caps. They want the $60+
>>> labour charge to do 2 minutes of soldering.
>
>1. Liability. If you kill yourself installing this cap, they may be liable.
Come on, that's absurd.
- Franc Zabkar

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Rudolf - 30 Jul 2007 03:18 GMT
>>1. Liability. If you kill yourself installing this cap, they may be
>>liable.
>
> Come on, that's absurd.
>
> - Franc Zabkar
Do you want to take a risk? I will not.
Rudolf